For Koha installations with multiple OPAC URLs, It would be nice to be
able to override systeprefs from the http conf file. Case in point,
a library wants to have two separate opacs, one the is only viewable
from within the library that allows patrons to place holds, and a second
public one that does not. In this case, overriding the system preference
RequestOnOpac would accomplish this simply, and with no ill affects.
This feature would of course be should only be used to override
cosmetic effects on the system, and should not be used for system
preferences such as CircControl, but would be great for preferences
such as OpacStarRatings, opacuserjs, OpacHighlightedWords and many
others!
Test Plan:
1) Apply this patch
2) Disable the system pref OpacHighlightedWords
3) Do a seach in the OPAC, not the term is not highlighted
4) Edit your koha-http.conf file, add the line
SetEnv OVERRIDE_SYSPREF_OpacHighlightedWords "1"
to your koha-http.conf file's OPAC section.
Also add the line
SetEnv OVERRIDE_SYSPREF_NAMES "OpacHighlightedWords"
to the Intranet section
5) Restart your web server, or just reload it's config
6) Do a seach, now your search term should be highlighted!
7) From the intranet preference editor, view the pref,
You should see a warning the this preference has been overridden.
Signed-off-by: Marcel de Rooy <m.de.rooy@rijksmuseum.nl>
Signed-off-by: Galen Charlton <gmc@esilibrary.com>
This patch fixes an issue where entering the complete name of a system
preference when doing a syspref search in the staff interface resulted
in the display of *all* preferences belonging to the desired one's
module.
Since providing a more specific search string should result in getting
back more specific results, the previous behavior was not intuitive.
Test scenario:
a) In sysprefs, do a search with partial match (e.g. intranetcolor)
-> Result shows one entry: intranetcolorstylesheet
b) Do an exact search. e.g. intranetcolorstylesheet
-> Result shows all Staff Client preferences
Apply patch, test again. Now b) behaves like a).
Signed-off-by: Mirko Tietgen <mirko@abunchofthings.net>
Signed-off-by: Galen Charlton <gmc@esilibrary.com>
Signed-off-by: Kyle M Hall <kyle@bywatersolutions.com>
Passes koha-qa.pl, works as advertised.
Signed-off-by: Galen Charlton <gmc@esilibrary.com>
Decodes searchfield.
Test plan:
Look for e accent in preferences. You should no longer see converted chars.
Signed-off-by: Bernardo Gonzalez Kriegel <bgkriegel@gmail.com>
Works ok, no errors.
Signed-off-by: Jared Camins-Esakov <jcamins@cpbibliography.com>
In current implementation (mostly commented out in this patch)
uses heuristic to guess which strings need decoding from utf-8
to binary representation and doesn't support utf-8 characters
in templates and has problems with utf-8 data from database.
With this changes, Koha perl code always uses utf-8 encoding
correctly. All incomming data from database is allready
correctly marked as utf-8, and decoding of utf8 is required
only from Zebra and XSLT transfers which don't set utf-8 flag
correctly.
For output, standard perl :encoding(utf8) handler is used
so it also removes various "wide character" warnings as side-effect.
Test scenario:
1. make sure that you have utf-8 characters in your biblio
records, patrons, categories etc.
2. try to search records on intranet and opac which contain
utf-8 characters
3. install language which has utf-8 characters, e.g. uk-UA
dpavlin@koha-dev:/srv/koha/misc/translator(bug_6554) $
PERL5LIB=/srv/koha/ perl translate install uk-UA
4. switch language to uk-UA and verify that templates
display correctly
5. test search and Z39.50 search and verify that caracters
are correct
Signed-off-by: Owen Leonard <oleonard@myacpl.org>
I followed the test plan, adding utf-8 characters to library names,
patron categories, titles, and authorized values. I tried the uk-UA
translation and everything looked good.
When performing Z39.50 searches for titles containing utf-8 characters I
got results which were still occasionally contaminated with dummy
characters [?] but I assume this is Z39.50's fault not the patch's.
Signed-off-by: Marcel de Rooy <m.de.rooy@rijksmuseum.nl>
Signed-off-by: Bernardo Gonzalez Kriegel <bgkriegel@gmail.com>
Already signed, add mine.
Signed-off-by: Jared Camins-Esakov <jcamins@cpbibliography.com>
This bug enables accented/diacritic system preference text to be matched
when searching for sysprefs.
Signed-off-by: wajasu <matted-34813@mypacks.net>
Signed-off-by: Paul Poulain <paul.poulain@biblibre.com>
Adding a check for an empty value in a couple of places
which seem to always get one.
As far as I can tell these places in the script are looping
over ALL the data in the pref files, and sometimes an empty
value comes through. I wonder if this is because of a minor
syntax error in the pref file?
My correction is a stab in the dark since I haven't determined
where the empty value is actually coming from. This change
quiets the errors in the log and doesn't seem to affect
preference search results.
Signed-off-by: Liz Rea <wizzyrea@gmail.com>
No more messages in the logs. Yay!
Ran unit tests on this (t, xt/author, xt, t/db_dependent)- nothing out of the ordinary in any.
Signed-off-by: Paul Poulain <paul.poulain@biblibre.com>
Use C4::Templates::_get_template_file instead od C4::Output::_get_template_file
in preferences.pl
Signed-off-by: Frédéric Demians <f.demians@tamil.fr>
Signed-off-by: Chris Cormack <chrisc@catalyst.net.nz>
This patch solves the situation that news is in another language than
the Koha interface AND makes that themelanguage routine is always called
the same way in order to prevent mixed display.
It fixes also a bug related to language preselection based on web
browser prefered language.
September 9: Adjusted with input of Frederic Demians.
Septembre 10: Avoid circular dependency, as pointed by Chris Cormack.
Templates related functions are moved from C4::Output to C4::Templates
Signed-off-by: Alex Arnaud <alex.arnaud@biblibre.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Walls <ian.walls@bywatersolutions.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Cormack <chrisc@catalyst.net.nz>
Scripts in admin & acqui subdirectores weren't passing t/00-testcritic.t. This
patch add admin & acqui scripts to test case and fix various errors related to
Perl::Critic compliancy.
- Fixing a style error to pass Perl::Critic, plus silencing a warn
- More style errors, plus fixing a security issue
- Explicitly using Carp
Contrary to common belief, subroutine prototypes do not enable
compile-time checks for proper arguments. Don't use them.
Defining a named sub within another sub, does not prevent that
subroutine being global
Signed-off-by: Frédéric Demians <frederic@tamil.fr>
Signed-off-by: Chris Cormack <chrisc@catalyst.net.nz>
This patch adds the standard date format hint used elsewhere
in the interface.
Signed-off-by: Galen Charlton <gmcharlt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Cormack <chrisc@catalyst.net.nz>
This patch eliminates the sysprefs-menu.inc include file and changes the
systempreferences.pl and systempreferences.tmpl files to work with the
prefs-menu.inc instead. This will centralize the syspref tabs and make it
easier to modify tabs in the future if necessary.
This commit also changes the default tab to Acquisitions, since the Local Use
tab does not work with preferences.pl at present.
Signed-off-by: Chris Cormack <chris@bigballofwax.co.nz>
Signed-off-by: Galen Charlton <gmcharlt@gmail.com>
This moves the "Jump to name preference functionality" to the search
bar: if your search term is found to be the exact name of a syspref,
then it is jumped to instead of executing a normal search.